You know how etiquette books say to never discuss politics at the dinner table?

Next Wave Advocacy, LLC, andDDC Advocacyboth have @home operations.

These advocacy groups run grassroots political campaigns on issues such as healthcare, energy, defense and taxes.

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Thats what Next Wave and DDC have figured out, and where your earning opportunity begins.

What Does the Job Involve?

Your job is to study the issue and understand which side the client represents.

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Theres no pre-written script, so youll have unique conversations with each person.

Then youll use that information to draft a letter on the persons behalf.

Our team has compiled alist of creative waysyou can fatten your bank account this week.

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This is a long list, so dont get overwhelmed.

Well keep it updated as offers changes or expire.

After you write the letter, the person receives a copy and either approves or rejects it.

How Much Can You Make?

Once you complete a campaign, youll likely be offered more.

Some campaigns require calling during regular business hours, and some have night and weekend work available.

You must have Internet connectivity and a computer workstation that meets the requirements to integrate with the companies systems.

Both companies list the specific technical requirements on their websites:NextWave technical requirementsandOnPoint technical requirements.

Unfortunately, neither company is set up to work with Macs.

No Special Skills Required

You dont need any special skills or training for either company.

You must be a good listener, so you might accurately communicate constituents thoughts.

Finally, you must be agood writerwho can put those thoughts on paper.

Writers for NextWave make no calls themselves.

They listen to recorded conversations and draft letters that way.

But it doesnt hurt to brush up on basic letter-writing skills before you apply.

Just be prepared to hear some strong opinions.

Your Turn: Would you try helping others express their political opinions?

(Can you sense my millennial sarcasm there?)

You know which ones were talking about: rent, utilities, cell phone bill, insurance, groceries…